DeWine, Cordray top governor primary results

Highland County results similar to those around state

From staff and wire reports

Ohio voters set up a matchup Tuesday between Republican Attorney General Mike DeWine and Democrat Richard Cordray in the fall governor’s race, picked a Trump-backed U.S. Senate candidate and approved a ballot issue creating new rules for drawing congressional districts.

In Highland County, Cordray came out on top in the six-candidate Democratic governor’s primary. The unofficial totals showed Cordray with 606 votes, Dennis Kucinich with 103, Bill O’Neill 42, Joe Schiavoni 41, Larry Ealy 22 and Paul Ray 19.

On the Republican side in Highland County, unofficial results showed DeWine with 2,036 votes and Mary Taylor with 1,637.

Jen Miller, executive director of the League of Women Voters of Ohio, said approval of Issue 1 after decades of attempts was a victory for the entire state.

Highland County also followed the state’s unofficial results on Issue 1 with 2,884 votes for proposal and 1,593 against it.

The new rules, which will take effect with 2021 maps, were modeled after new map-making rules for Ohio legislative districts that Ohio voters strongly supported in 2016.

Aimed at curbing partisan gerrymandering, they will limit how counties are split into multiple districts and require more support from the minority party to put a 10-year map in place.

If lawmakers can’t agree, an existing bipartisan commission will take over. If that fails, the majority party can pass a shorter-term map.

In the race for governor, DeWine prevailed over Lt. Gov. Taylor after a markedly nasty primary campaign in which she called him a “phony conservative” and he called her unqualified.

Cordray, a former consumer watchdog appointed by President Barack Obama, won the Democratic nomination after an unusually tough fight by former U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich, who ran to his left on an anti-gun, pro-environment platform.

Both men have run for the same seats before. DeWine ousted Cordray from the attorney general’s seat in a close contest in 2010. In 2000, Cordray lost a four-way Democratic primary for DeWine’s Senate seat.

In the Republican Senate primary, U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci, of Wadsworth, won the GOP nod to challenge Democratic U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown this fall.

Renacci had the backing of President Donald Trump ahead of Tuesday’s five-way contest. Also in the race was Cleveland investment banker Mike Gibbons and three others.

Ohio voters also decided a host of unusually competitive congressional and state legislative seats.

Absentee voting was up compared with the same time in the 2014 midterm election, the secretary of state’s office said.